african cup of nations
Eto'o is Africa's lion again
2010 fifa world cup | african cup of nations | fifa club world cup | samuel eto'o | sean o'conor | uefa champions leagueIf Alexander the Great conquered the known world and beyond by the age of 30, Samuel Eto'o has come pretty close on the football field. He has just been named African Footballer of the Year f or a record fourth time and shows no signs of calling a halt to an already illustrious career. At 29, the Cameroonian captain has a soccer CV most of us would die for. He is his country's captain and record goalscorer and has represented Cameroon in three FIFA World Cups , won an Olympic Games gold medal and won two African Nations Cups with the Indomitable Lions, while participating in a further four. He remains the all-time top scorer in that tournament and has netted 52 times in 101 games for his nation. His club resumé includes Barcelona, Inter and Real Madrid and Eto'o has won the UEFA Champions League at all of them. This year he became the first footballer to win two continental trebles of league, cup and Champions League, having collected a clean sweep first at Barcelona and then at Inter. Leaving Spain after five seasons and 171 strikes he joined José Mourinho at Inter in a swap deal with Zlatan Ibrahimovic and bagged 21 goals, not bad for an inaugural outing in defence-heavy Serie A. A string of other garlands include a purple year in 2006 when he became La Liga's top gunner and won the Man of the Match award in the Champions League final. Most recently, Eto'o scored in the FIFA World Club Cup final as Inter were crowned the best team on the planet, their Cameroonian ace receiving the Golden Ball. A lithe runner blessed with turbo-charged heels, a quick-thinking footballing brain and a lethal shot, Eto'o has also had h is fair share of knockers, from coaches, players and journalists who have questioned his attitude and priorities, to 'fans' bellowing racist abuse at him in Spain and Italy. Yet like all great players, he answers his critics on the field of play, a perfect pitch for this indomitable lion of Africa. (c) Sean O'Conor & Soccerphile Tags World Cup Pens World Cup Posters Euro 2012 football
Sanchez still facing axe despite London victory
2010 fifa world cup | african cup of nations | ghanaMexico came from behind to beat Ghana 2-1 at Craven Cottage and might possibly have saved Hugo Sanchez his job as national team coach. The former Real Madrid and Mexico legend had been on deathwatch all week, after the nation's U23 team, which Sanchez also coaches, failed to qualify for this summer's Olympic Games in Beijing, after losing to Guatemala and drawing with Canada earlier this month. On Monday, the Mexican federation meets to consider Sanchez's 18-month reign, and are widely expected to send him packing. If anything might have changed their mind however, it was El Tri snatching a win from the jaws of defeat at Fulham. John Mensah hauled back Mexican substitute Adolfo Bautista as he muscled his way into the box with a minute to play, and Pavel Pardo converted the penalty to send the Mexicans home victorious. The scoreline was harsh on a Ghana side who had dominated the majority of the second half and overpowered their CONCACAF opponents in the midfield exchanges. Michael Essien looked to have sent the Black Stars to victory with his spectacular 55th minute strike from 25 yards past Mexican goalkeeper Oswaldo Sanchez, but the Chelsea star turned villain in the 77th with some slack play in front of his own goal which led to an equaliser. The £24 million-pound player was over-casual as he jogged back with the ball, two Mexican attackers in close attendance. Essien's back pass was not underhit, but the greased surface took its toll as debutant goalie Patrick Antwi miscontrolled the spinning ball, allowing Carlos Salcido to slide in and then tap it into an unguarded net. "A stupid mistake," Ghana coach Claude Le Roy describe d it as afterwards. "You cannot take any risks in the last 30 yards in high-level football." This moment of schoolboy soccer provided delicious entertainment to the colourful and noisy Mexican expats suffering a wintry English night from the Stevenage Road stand. The conditions were wet and chilly, the opposite of Accra or Mexico City, and with Brazil playing Sweden across town at Ashburton Grove, and England taking on France on television, the crowd at the Cottage was never going to be huge. But the Ghanaians and Mexicans in attendance created a carnival atmosphere, a tribute to London's multicultural preeminence, and what a difference these two peoples made to an otherwise gloomy English evening. From the moment the opening bars of Mexico's concerto-length national anthem caused the green-shirted players to stiffen their arms across their chests, it was never going to be a usual day at Craven Cottage. The African fans raised a tumult of noise straight out of the recent African Cup of Nations, hosted by Ghana, while their opposition counterparts performed the wave named after them, ten minutes in. Mexico almost stole the lead in under 20 seconds when Manchester City star Nery Castillo surged up the right wing and centred for Antonio De Nigris. The Ankaraspor striker hit it first time but saw his shot saved by the legs of a relieved Richard Kingson. The Central Americans, ranked 16th by FIFA to Ghana's 15th, started the better but soon Ghana had got their measure. Anthony Annan and Essien began to boss the middle, carving through the flimsy stockade erected by the pinned-down Pardo and pint-sized Fernando Arce, while the muscular Junior Agogo ensured the Mexican back four stayed on their toes. Yet on the stroke of half time it was the Tricolores who almost snatched the lead. Castillo sprung the Ghanaian offside trap and rounded Kingson, but with a goal looking certain, Mensah played the hero with a last-ditch tackle to stop the ball crossing the line. After Essien's opener ten minutes after the break, Ghana slipped into cruise control and started funnelling players forward in search of a second, but got no closer than a string of long-range efforts off-target. Mexico had looked decidedly second-best, particularly in midfield, but their two late strikes served as a reminder that football is unpredictable and that it is goa ls, more than who is the best team, which win games. Ghana coach Claude Le Roy, a familiar face having coached Cameroon, Congo and Senegal before, thought referee Rob Styles had been less than even-handed and rued the volte-face of the contest. "I don't know why he had something against us," Le Roy said of the referee. "A lot, a lot of big mistakes. We are a very creative and fair team. I don't know why he took so many decisions against us." "We were in the game when Michael scored the first goal," he said. "Then we gave the chance to the Mexican players. At this time they were no more in the game. That is the permanent story of football." Sanchez appeared relaxed for someone apparently facing the axe, answering softly the prods from the various Mexican journalists arranged around him, some of them sniffing blood before the kick-off. "Yes, I have to say openly that we failed, but that is a separate chapter," Sanchez said of the Olympic setback, adding that he was now looking towards the 2010 World Cup qualifiers, which for Mexico begin in June. "I'm asking for there to be patience and teamwork, which is the only way to get results." Perhaps it will all be too late. Missing out on the Olympics was a matter of national soccer shame for a country overtaken by the USA in the last decade as the premier football country of CONCACAF. One Mexican fan held up a sign saying 'Hugo - one more and it's over'. Maybe it already is and the Federation's mind is made up, but if so, at least Hugo left with a win. Scoring: GHA – Essien 55' MEX – Salcido 77' MEX – Pardo pen. 88' GHANA – Richard Kingson (Birmingham City), John Paintsil (West Ham), Eric Addo (PSV) , John Mensah (Rennes), Afful Harrison (Asante Kotoko), Haminu Dramani (Lokomotiv Moscow), Anthony Annan (Stabaek), Michael Essien (Chelsea), Laryea Kingston (Hearts), Sulley Muntari (Portsmouth), Manuel Agogo (Nottingham Forest). Subs: Owusu Abayie (Celta Vigo) for Kingston 46', Patrick Antwi (Liberty Professionals) for Kingson 46', Andre Ayew (Marseille) for Dramani 46', Eric Bekoe (Asante Kotoko) for Agogo 81'. MEXICO – Oswaldo Sanchez (Santos Laguna), Ricardo Osorio (Stuttgart), Aaron Galindo(Eintracht Frankfurt), Carlos Salcido (PSV), Fausto Pinto (Pachuca), Nery Castillo (Manchester City), Fernando Arce (Santos Laguna), Pavel Pardo (Stuttgart),, Gerardo Torrado (Cruz Azul), Antonio De Nigris (Ankaraspor), Andres Guardado (Deportivo La Coruna). Subs: Guillermo Franco for De Nigri 46', Jimmy Lozano (Cruz Azul) for Pinto 67', Antonio Naelson for Arce 67', Adolfo Bautista for Castillo 80' (c) Sean O'Conor & Soccerphile Bet with Bet 365 World Soccer News Soccer betting tips Soccer Books & DVDs Tags Soccer News soccer football J-League K-League Betting
Cameroon Fans African Cup of Nations
african cup of nations | ghana | ross cleggYouTube video from the African Cup of Nations held in Ghana earlier on this year. This time Cameroon fans get behind their team.... Video by Ross Clegg Bet with Bet 365 World Soccer News Soccer betting tips Soccer Books & DVDs Tags Soccer News soccer football African soccer Cameroon Ghana
Mali Fan Dance
african cup of nations | mali | ross cleggFurther video from the African Cup of Nations held in Ghana earlier this year. Loin cloth, full body painting and that African beat..... Video by Ross Clegg Bet with Bet 365 World Soccer News Soccer betting tips Soccer Books & DVDs Tags Soccer News soccer football African soccer Mali Ghana
Is Essam El-Hadary Testing the Webster Ruling? Maybe, maybe not
african cup of nations | domestic football | world footballIs Essam El-Hadary going to be our test case for the Webster ruling, or isn’t he? The battle is on. Just last week Daryl was saying that Essam El-Hadary, the African Cup of Nations-winning goalkeeper from Egypt, was going to be the Webster test. Webster, if you remember, is the extremely controversial new ruling [...]
More video from the
african cup of nations | ross cleggMore video from the African Cup of Nations held in Ghana earlier this year. Witch doctors are part and parcel of the African supporters' scene. This witch doctor from Benin couldn't inspire his team or jinx their opponents as Benin lost all 3 of their Group B games conceding 7 goals and scoring only one. Video by Ross Clegg Bet with Bet 365 World Soccer News Soccer betting tips Soccer Books & DVDs Tags Soccer News soccer football African soccer Benin Ghana Witch Doctor
African Cup of Nations - Hallelujah
african cup of nations | ghanaMore from the African Cup of Nations held in Ghana earlier this year. Ghana fans get God on their side with this nifty little two-step and hand clap routine. Video by Ross Clegg Bet with Bet 365 World Soccer News Soccer betting tips Soccer Books & DVDs Tags Soccer News soccer football African soccer Ghana Betting
African Cup of Nations - Mali Drums
african cup of nations | ross cleggWe look back at the African Cup of Nations held in Ghana earlier this year. Enjoy this African drum ensemble from Mali's fans in Ghana. Video by Ross Clegg Bet with Bet 365 World Soccer News Soccer betting tips Soccer Books & DVDs Tags Soccer News soccer football African soccer Mali Betting
Samuel Eto’o Might Be Ghanaian
african cup of nationsGhanaian tabloid Graphic Sports recently ran a story about a Ghanaian family claiming kinship with Barcelona and Cameroon superstar striker (and all time Africa Cup of Nations top scorer, I might add) Samuel Eto’o. This wouldn’t make Eto’o any less Cameroonian, because that’s where his mother is form. But it would make him half-Ghanaian. The tabloid [...]
Watch All 99 Goals From African Cup of Nations
african cup of nations | world footballNinety-nine goals. Some of them pretty spectacular. Watch them here and look forward to 2010. (First spotted on 101 Great Goals)

